100114 chronic coronary artery disease Flashcards

1
Q

chronic ischemic heart disease

A

most commonly caused by obstruction of coronary arteries by atheromatous plaque

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2
Q

location, quality, duration, aggravating or alleviating factors, and associated symptoms of angina

A

retrosternal location: radiates to or occasionally isolated to neck, jaw, shoulders, arms, or epigastrium

pressure, squeezing, tightness, heaviness, burning, indigestion

under 2-10 minutes

made worse by exertion, cold weather, emotional stress

relieved by rest or nitroglycerin

associated symptoms: dyspnea. S3, S4, or murmur of papillary dyxfxn during pain

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3
Q

what on EKG signals infarction?

A

Q wave (although some leads may have small Q waves normally due to their location)

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4
Q

in acute STEMI, what would you observe in sequence on EKG?

A

immediately before MI starts–T wave inversion

within hours after MI–marked ST elevation and upright T wave

hours later–significant Q, ST elevation, upright T

hours to a day or two later–significant Q, less ST elevation, marked T inversion

days to weeks later–significant Q, T wave inversion

weeks, months, years–significant Q only

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5
Q

ST elevation signals

A

injury

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6
Q

Q wave signals

A

infarct

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7
Q

if you see Q wave in leads II, III, avF, what does this signal?

A

infarct in inferior wall

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8
Q

V5, V6, I, aVL together-if you see STEMI signs on EKG, represent what location of the heart?

A

lateral wall

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9
Q

anterior wall STEMI would show irregulaties in which leads on EKG?

A

V2 to V4

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10
Q

if II, III, aVF are the leads depicting primary EKG changes, what is the likely vessel involved?

A

RCA

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11
Q

if V1 and V2 are the leads depicting primary EKG changes, what is the likely vessel involved?

A

LAD

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12
Q

if I, aVL, V5-V6 are the leads depicting primary EKG changes, what is the likely vessel involved?

A

CIRC

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13
Q

if infarct is in posterior heart, what lead would you see prominent changes in EKG?

A

V1–you would see prominent R

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14
Q

coronary angiography is used

A

in diagnosing coronary heart disease-to look at obstruction

invasive procedures

lesions greater than 70% are considered significant

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15
Q

white tissue on MRI could indicate

A

scar tissue (after tissue infarct)

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16
Q

revascularization can be used for symptomatic chronic coronary lesions-true or false?

A

true
-PCI (balloon, stent), surgical bypass

however, for most pts with chronic angina, revascularization shouldnot constitute initial management strategy before evidence based medical therapy (like phamacologic antianginal therapy, therapetuic lifestyle changes) is initiated and optimized

17
Q

if scarring of myocardium has occurred, will balloon angioplasty (PTCA) help?

A

no

18
Q

bypass graft (an invasive procedure, have to open up chest wall ) may be better than PCI for

A

left main artery obstruction
multiple vessels involved
diabetics

19
Q

sequela of chronic coronary artery disease

A

chronic chest discomfort (stable angina)
cardiomyopathy (heart failure)
left ventricular aneurysms
ventricular arrhthmias/sudden death